CUBAN CULTURE, CHRONICLES and COUNTERFEITING – THE secrets BEHIND CIGAR labels

Cuba’s cigars, along with amazing ‘50s cars, amazing music and tantalising architecture, are an icon of the nation. but there’s much more to the typically elaborately patterned, brightly coloured bands that ring each cigar than just decoration…

Cuba has been heralded as making the finest cigars in the world for centuries. Its rich, dark volcanic soil, tropical climate, and conventional farming and production methods produce stunning cigars that are much more like works of art – a point of consternation each time I light one.

When would you typically set fire to artwork that you love?

On our last trip to Cuba, we went to the Partagas factory in Havana. It was amazing to see the rollers (known as torcedores) thoroughly crafting each cigar.

The finishing touch is gluing the label around the cigar with a conventional plant-based adhesive.

Check out our video from Cuba, where we took to the Cuban cigar trail around Havana:

Click here to view this video on YouTube.

My preferred cigar brand, Montecristo, gets its name from Alexandre Dumas’ The count of Monte Cristo. It was the torcedores’ preferred story, read to them by a ‘lector’ to entertain them as they worked.

This cigar company (and others like Romeo y Julieta) pay homage to its literary roots in its label. The royal fleur de lis on Montecristo cigar bands and the crossed swords on the box logos are both nods to the book.

But these stunning labels on premium cigars do much more than merely decorate or talk of heritage and provenance.

They have other functions too.

Spotting a fake Cuban cigar

Other than price, the packaging is probably the best tip to a fake cigar.

Check out our story on spotting fake Cuban cigars here.

So aside from marketing and branding purposes, cigar companies developed evermore fancy designs to decrease counterfeits.

But in spite of labels being increasingly much more challenging to copy, re-labeled fakes are rife throughout the world.

By the 1950s, the owner of Cuban brand Cabañas reckoned: “for every one of the two million Cuban cigars I ship to Europe, six million are sold there.”

It’s another reason to only purchase from reputable companies or – if possible – from sanctioned shops in Cuba itself.

The downside to this of course is that the Cuban government owns and controls all the cigar shops and even the factories, so you’re giving money to a corrupt power.

Every silver lining has its cloud, I suppose.

How old is your cigar?

In this on-going battle against fraudulent cigars, brands update the labels regularly. Some, like Cohiba – the most expensive, prestigious and for that reason many copied cigar brand – dink their cigar bands practically every other year, or so it seems.

Changes like this are both a worry and a delight to cigar enthusiasts.

Firstly, when your band looks different to what you’re used to, you fret that you’ve purchased a fake cigar. On the other hand, it makes dating your cigars relatively easy.

Aged cigars can be very valuable. and like premium wines, well-kept fine cigars develop and mature over time.

As you can see, these three Montecristo cigars each have a slightly different band and are from very different ‘vintages’.

The lighter colour and no embossing implies this cigar was made between 2003 and 2006 when Montecristo changed their labels. I purchased this one in around 2005.

A darker, glossier label and an embossed insignia comes from between 2006 and 2013. this one is from about 2011.

Larger and much darker label with a gold foil embossed fleur de lis is the current line started in 2013. I was given this cigar as a birthday present in 2015.

If you have one that doesn’t look like any of these, it could be from anywhere between 1940s to 2003. Or possibly a special edition.

With plain packaging laws covering up cigar bands, it’s hard to even see the branding. Or to tell if what you purchase is real. many of the time, the unsightly brown stickers can come off revealing the original label beneath.

But pealing off a label isn’t going to go down too well with the shopkeeper.

Check out the Cuban Cigar site – an outstanding depository of numerous Cuban brands’ labels through the years – if you’re not sure.

As for my three examples, the ageing process is going well. keeping them in a relative humidity of 70% in a temperature-controlled cedar-lined humidor has done wonders.

The oldest smells completely different to the other two – richer, deeper and much more fragrant. I’m looking forward to finding out how it tastes!

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